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<B>Warren Buffett</B>, left, says former employee David Sokol violated ethics and insider-trading policies.
Warren Buffett, left, says former employee David Sokol violated ethics and insider-trading policies.
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OMAHA — Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting Saturday was dominated by somber topics, as Warren Buffett explained to roughly 40,000 shareholders how the company had been battered by a trusted former employee’s misdeeds and a string of natural disasters.

Buffett assured the crowd at an Omaha convention center that Berkshire is strong enough to withstand both the David Sokol scandal and the estimated $1.7 billion in insurance losses that drove profits down 58 percent in the first quarter.

Buffett said he doesn’t think he’ll ever understand why Sokol bought stock in Lubrizol shortly before recommending Berkshire buy the chemical company. Buffett said he thinks Sokol clearly violated Berkshire’s ethics and insider-trading policies.

“It’s a situation that’s sad for Berkshire and sad for Dave,” Buffett said.

Buffett acknowledged that he made a mistake by not asking Sokol more about his Lubrizol stock when they first discussed the company in January. Buffett said he had no reason to think Sokol had bought the stock the week before.

Buffett previewed Berkshire’s earnings at the annual meeting, ahead of their scheduled release Friday. He said the biggest factor in the earnings drop was roughly $1.7 billion in pretax losses related to the Japanese earthquake and tsunami, Australian floods and the New Zealand earthquake.

“We had probably the second-worst quarter for the insurance industry in terms of disasters around the globe,” Buffett said.

Buffett estimates that Berkshire will report $1.5 billion in net income, down from $3.6 billion last year.

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